Abstract

Geometric deviations are inevitably observable on every manufactured workpiece. These deviations affect the function and quality of mechanical products and have therefore to be controlled by geometric tolerances. Computer-aided tolerancing aims at supporting design, manufacturing, and inspection by determining and quantifying these effects of geometric deviations on the product quality and the functional behaviour. However, most established tolerance representation schemes imply abstractions of geometric deviations and are not conform with the standards for geometric dimensioning and tolerancing. These limitations led to the development of a Skin Model inspired framework for the tolerance analysis, which is based on a representation of non-ideal workpieces employing discrete geometry representation schemes, such as point clouds and surface meshes. In this contribution, this Skin Model inspired framework for computer aided tolerancing is extended to systems in motion and applied to the tolerance analysis of rotating mechanism with higher kinematic pairs. For this purpose, the generation of non-ideal part representatives, as well as their processing with algorithms for registration and computational geometry are highlighted. Finally, the results are visualized and interpreted. The procedure as well as the simulation model itself are shown in a case study of a disk cam mechanism.